I'm currently studying for the WSET on home study and I have to say it's kicking my rear. Well not quite, it's making me very weary some days. There is so much to learn about wine and it's like this bottomless pit. However, it's a nice journey and I know so much more than a year ago. I was a casual drinker and then decided I was going to take this seriously. I highly recommend taking wine classes as it makes it more enjoyable.
I've made up a lot of questions on wine and will post them now and again to challenge you on wine.
I've had quite a few great little wines this past month. Including the Beaujolais Nouveau which a lot of wine snobs criticize every year. I think it's a great marketing tool for the region and I love a gluggable easy drinking bottle of cheap plonk any day of the week.
I've had one quite nice simple glug courtesy of Sam's Clubs buyers, Called Chateau Tour de Segur which is one of the Andre Lurton properties in Bordeaux. AC Lussac-Saint Emilion to be exact. If you haven't heard of the Lurton family, you should do so, as they own or run quite a lot of Bordeaux. D'Yquem, Cheval Blanc and a host of different properties throughout Bordeaux. Sort of like the Kennedy clan is to politics in the USA, but I would say on a broader scale. They carry quite a lot of power within the region. Usually if you see the Lurton name on a bottle (can be from bottles from all over the world as some of the family are flying winemakers in the new world) you can be assured it's a good bottle and what I've seen the value for money is excellent. I'm sure there's a few flubs out there as with any mass producer or importer, but on the whole quite a nice bottle of wine can be had regardless of it's status within the classe and chateau system of Bordeaux.
I gave the 2000 Chateau Tou de Segur 88 points, although I think some people would think it to be a 89 or 90 point wine. It's got a lot value and is very easy drinking with a mixed style of old and new world. You get some minerality but with a lot of excellent fruit and balance of oak. I think the rating system is way too giving and some wines getting better marks for the relationship with the magazine or reviewer than what it normally should be.
There is nothing wrong with an 80-85 bottle of wine. But the push to get higher ratings is becoming extraordinary and I think the 100 point system needs to be revised as it's really becoming the original 20 point system before Parker changed the rating structure. 100 does indeed sound better than 20. But all wines regardless how terrible they are get 50 points automatically and go up from there.
I think overoaked wine should be a 10 point deduction if it's not a wine that is destined for aging. These California chardonnays that taste like sawdust and won't age 2 years should never qualify for anything 90 and higher because of their complete inbalance.
Have you ever had a wine that had a 90 rating and you don't know how it got there. Basically a wine can taste better two months previously and does depend on the weather and of course the subjective nature of the tasting. A wine can close down and go into hibernation, if it does that, decant it and sit it out for a few hours and then retaste it. I find a wine will usually come back if it's allowed to age a few hours in the decanter.
They say if it's damp and dreary wine can not taste as well as it could on a clear day. Well I sort of think (I'm still new to wine so I could be wrong) that's hogwash because England would never be the serious Bordeaux drinkers they are if it was.
Regardless of my mindless rambling, the system needs to be revised. I'm going to use a 10 point system and if the wine is out of balance, it just won't get a rating. Over fruit, over oaked, or over whatever, it will just be noted and buyers can make their own judgement. There is also a 10 point snob rating. A known good producer gets a point, year produced gets a point, region, chateau, winemaker etc. Which though the taste may be lacking the wine still gets points based on it's pedigree.
Okay so. Chateau tour de Segur 2000 gets 7 points on the taste scale and on the snob scale it gets a 6. How did it get it's points?
Taste Points
- Beautiful colour, deep ruby
- Nice viscosity, nice legs
- Nice strawberry and raspberry fruit, good minerality
- Well Balanced
- 13% alcohol Big plus. These 14-16% cab/merlots have got to GO
- French Oak
- Nice medium finish
Snob Points
- Appellation of Lussac-Saint Emilion versus the generic appellation of St. Emilion.
- It's a Andre Lurton property.
- It's a blend versus a great hunk of Merlot.
- French Oak always gets a snob point.
- 13% alcohol versus these current monsters that are on the market definitely gets a snob point.
- 2000 harvest.
Were it a classed growth it would get more snob points. So for $14 bottle, yea that's a really good bottle of wine!
I should give it an hour quotient based on how long it would take to drink this bottle based on it's enjoyability and that would be a respectable 30 minutes per glass. I do 6 glasses per bottle, so it would be a nice 3 hour bottle. Based on two cut it in half. How do I come up with an hour quotient? An hour quotient is the enjoyability of the wine. The better the wine the slower you are apt to drink it. You enjoy the wine more and allow more time to have it evolve in the glass. You are patient with good wine whereas not so good wine you have a tendency to drink it much faster. Good wine makes you think about it. A Cheval Blanc were I to drink it alone and were it a relatively young wine would take me about 6-7 hours. Of course an old bottle would never last that long and would be a waste not drunk with friends. Never mind that pathetic, coarse, wine elitist drunk from Sideways. Oh but that's another day.
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